This is actually pretty cool, it lets you search by your vehicle type and then asks you a bunch of questions about how you drive and what type of environment you'll drive in and gives you some options and discounts. VERY COOL, give it a try.

When I chose off-road for the Trailblazer it gave me a list of tires ranging from $90 to $150, very cool.

This is actually pretty cool, it lets you search by your vehicle type and then asks you a bunch of questions about how you drive and what type of environment you'll drive in and gives you some options and discounts. VERY COOL, give it a try.

When I chose off-road for the Trailblazer it gave me a list of tires ranging from $90 to $150, very cool.

Click to expand...

It's better than nothing, but I've never been all that impressed. My biggest gripe is the two questions:

Do you EVER plan on driving this vehicle in the snow? Do you EVER plan on driving this vehicle off-road.

I've got a fairly new truck and I live in Georgia. EVER is a big word. If it snows here, which is rare, then yes, I'll drive it in the snow, but while I want that taken into account (i.e. sniping), it shouldn't be a major factor. Same with "off-road", I suppose at some point I might drive down a dirt road. I could even imagine driving down a gravel road at some point, but again, do I want this to be a major factor? Absolutely not. What I'm looking for is a good, quiet, street tire with some small off-road/snow capability, not a dedicated off-road tire. The decision guide doesn't really give me that option.